"I am so pleased we are together"Frasier, 16, and his younger brother, 15, were adopted together when they were aged eight and seven, after their adoptive parents saw their profile in Be My Parent. Frasier tells us what he feels about adoption generally and being adopted with his brother.

"We are a family"Linda and her husband Paul were 37 and 39 when their three daughters, Emily, Chloe and Katie, came to live with them. Six years on and Linda talks us through her family’s adoption journey, tells us about the girls, now aged 9, 10 and 11, and gives us her thoughts on adopting a group of siblings.

The girls have their say!Sisters Emily, Chloe and Katie, now aged 9, 10 and 11, were adopted together six years ago. They tell us about themselves, each other, their family, and how they feel about being adopted together as a sibling group.

A rewarding challengeAdoption social worker Annette Hope, from Wigan Council, appeared on Channel 4’s 15,000 Kids and Counting series. This gave an unprecedented glimpse into the adoption process. Annette talks through some issues involved in the difficult but rewarding task of family-finding for siblings.

"We were meant to be together"Each year, many babies are adopted into the adoptive families of their older brothers and sisters, and this is one way of keeping birth siblings together through adoption. Lesley Felce talks to Christine about the adoption of her now three-year-old daughter, Kiera, and hears how, two and a half years on, they have just welcomed Kiera’s baby half-brother, Liam, into the family.

British Association for Adoption and Fostering is a registered charity no. 275689 (England and Wales) and SC039337 (Scotland). Registered as a company limited by guarantee in England and Wales no. 01379092. Registered office at Saffron House, 6-10 Kirby Street, London EC1N 8TS